With this the broker took her and turned away with her,and she asked,'Whither goest thou with me?'He answered,'Back to thy master the Persian;it sufficeth me what hath befallen me because of thee this day;for thou hast been the means of spoiling both my trade and his by thine ill manners.'Then she looked about the market right and left,front and rear till,by the decree of the Decreer her eyes fell on Ali Nur al-Din the Cairene.So she gazed at him and saw him[469] to be a comely youth of straight slim form and smooth of face,fourteen years old,rare in beauty and loveliness and elegance and amorous grace like the full moon on the fourteenth night with forehead flower-white,and cheeks rosy red,neck like alabaster and teeth than jewels and dews of lips sweeter than sugar,even as saith of him one of his describers;'Came to match him in beauty and loveliness rare * Full moons and gazelles but quoth I,'Soft fare!
Fare softly,gazelles,nor yourselves compare * With him and,O Moons,all your pains forbear!'
And how well saith another bard;'Slim-waisted loveling,from his hair and brow * Men wake a-morn in night and light renewed.
Blame not the mole that dwelleth on his cheek * For Nu'uman's bloom aye shows spot negro-hued.'
When the slave-girl beheld Nur al-Din he interposed between her and her wits;she fell in love to him with a great and sudden fall and her heart was taken with affection for him;--And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
When it was the Eight Hundred and Seventy-third Night; She pursued,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that when the slave-girl beheld Nur al-Din,her heart was taken with affection for him;so she turned to the broker and said to him,'Will not yonder young merchant,who is sitting among the traders in the gown of striped broadcloth,bid somewhat more for me?'The broker replied,'O lady of fair ones,yonder young man is a stranger from Cairo,where his father is chief of the trader-guild and surpasseth all the merchants and notables of the place.He is but lately come to this our city and lodgeth with one of his father's friends;but he hath made no bid for thee nor more nor less.'